Clonal Patch Size and Ramet Position of Leymus chinensis Affected Reproductive Allocation.

Reproductive allocation is critically important for population maintenance and usually varies with not only environmental factors but also biotic ones. As a typical rhizome clonal plant in China's northern grasslands, Leymus chinensis usually dominates the steppe communities and grows in clonal...

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Main Authors: Chan Zhou, Zhengwen Wang, Junyue Guo, Zhuo Zhang, Yunfei Yang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2015-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4607369?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-c1fa08138331404997add2727215d0332020-11-24T21:41:27ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032015-01-011010e014035010.1371/journal.pone.0140350Clonal Patch Size and Ramet Position of Leymus chinensis Affected Reproductive Allocation.Chan ZhouZhengwen WangJunyue GuoZhuo ZhangYunfei YangReproductive allocation is critically important for population maintenance and usually varies with not only environmental factors but also biotic ones. As a typical rhizome clonal plant in China's northern grasslands, Leymus chinensis usually dominates the steppe communities and grows in clonal patches. In order to clarify the sexual reproductive allocation of L. chinensis in the process of the growth and expansion, we selected L. chinensis clonal patches of a range of sizes to examine the reproductive allocation and allometric growth of the plants. Moreover, the effects of position of L. chinensis ramets within the patch on their reproductive allocation were also examined. Clonal patch size and position both significantly affected spike biomass, reproductive tiller biomass and SPIKE/TILLER biomass ratio. From the central to the marginal zone, both the spike biomass and reproductive tiller biomass displayed an increasing trend in all the five patch size categories except for reproductive tiller biomass in 15-40m2 category. L. chinensis had significantly larger SPIKE/TILLER biomass ratio in marginal zone than in central zone of clonal patches that are larger than 15 m2 in area. Regression analysis showed that the spike biomass and SPIKE/TILLER biomass ratio were negatively correlated with clonal patch size while patch size showed significantly positive effect on SEED/SPIKE biomass ratio, but the reproductive tiller biomass and SEED/TILLER biomass ratio were not dependent on clonal patch size. The relationships between biomass of spike and reproductive tiller, between mature seed biomass and spike biomass and between mature seed biomass and reproductive tiller biomass were significant allometric for all or some of patch size categories, respectively. The slopes of all these allometric relationships were significantly different from 1. The allometric growth of L. chinensis is patch size-dependent. This finding will be helpful for developing appropriate practices for the management of L. chinensis-dominant grasslands.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4607369?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Chan Zhou
Zhengwen Wang
Junyue Guo
Zhuo Zhang
Yunfei Yang
spellingShingle Chan Zhou
Zhengwen Wang
Junyue Guo
Zhuo Zhang
Yunfei Yang
Clonal Patch Size and Ramet Position of Leymus chinensis Affected Reproductive Allocation.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Chan Zhou
Zhengwen Wang
Junyue Guo
Zhuo Zhang
Yunfei Yang
author_sort Chan Zhou
title Clonal Patch Size and Ramet Position of Leymus chinensis Affected Reproductive Allocation.
title_short Clonal Patch Size and Ramet Position of Leymus chinensis Affected Reproductive Allocation.
title_full Clonal Patch Size and Ramet Position of Leymus chinensis Affected Reproductive Allocation.
title_fullStr Clonal Patch Size and Ramet Position of Leymus chinensis Affected Reproductive Allocation.
title_full_unstemmed Clonal Patch Size and Ramet Position of Leymus chinensis Affected Reproductive Allocation.
title_sort clonal patch size and ramet position of leymus chinensis affected reproductive allocation.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2015-01-01
description Reproductive allocation is critically important for population maintenance and usually varies with not only environmental factors but also biotic ones. As a typical rhizome clonal plant in China's northern grasslands, Leymus chinensis usually dominates the steppe communities and grows in clonal patches. In order to clarify the sexual reproductive allocation of L. chinensis in the process of the growth and expansion, we selected L. chinensis clonal patches of a range of sizes to examine the reproductive allocation and allometric growth of the plants. Moreover, the effects of position of L. chinensis ramets within the patch on their reproductive allocation were also examined. Clonal patch size and position both significantly affected spike biomass, reproductive tiller biomass and SPIKE/TILLER biomass ratio. From the central to the marginal zone, both the spike biomass and reproductive tiller biomass displayed an increasing trend in all the five patch size categories except for reproductive tiller biomass in 15-40m2 category. L. chinensis had significantly larger SPIKE/TILLER biomass ratio in marginal zone than in central zone of clonal patches that are larger than 15 m2 in area. Regression analysis showed that the spike biomass and SPIKE/TILLER biomass ratio were negatively correlated with clonal patch size while patch size showed significantly positive effect on SEED/SPIKE biomass ratio, but the reproductive tiller biomass and SEED/TILLER biomass ratio were not dependent on clonal patch size. The relationships between biomass of spike and reproductive tiller, between mature seed biomass and spike biomass and between mature seed biomass and reproductive tiller biomass were significant allometric for all or some of patch size categories, respectively. The slopes of all these allometric relationships were significantly different from 1. The allometric growth of L. chinensis is patch size-dependent. This finding will be helpful for developing appropriate practices for the management of L. chinensis-dominant grasslands.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4607369?pdf=render
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